US8750287B2 - Traffic-engineered connection establishment across resource domains for data transport - Google Patents

Traffic-engineered connection establishment across resource domains for data transport Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US8750287B2
US8750287B2 US13/265,963 US201013265963A US8750287B2 US 8750287 B2 US8750287 B2 US 8750287B2 US 201013265963 A US201013265963 A US 201013265963A US 8750287 B2 US8750287 B2 US 8750287B2
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
service
inter
service provider
connection
chain
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Fee Related, expires
Application number
US13/265,963
Other versions
US20120051221A1 (en
Inventor
Dinh Thai Bui
Helia Pouyllau
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
RPX Corp
Nokia USA Inc
Original Assignee
Alcatel Lucent SAS
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Alcatel Lucent SAS filed Critical Alcatel Lucent SAS
Assigned to ALCATEL LUCENT reassignment ALCATEL LUCENT ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: BUI, DINH THAI, POUYLLAU, HELIA
Publication of US20120051221A1 publication Critical patent/US20120051221A1/en
Assigned to CREDIT SUISSE AG reassignment CREDIT SUISSE AG SECURITY AGREEMENT Assignors: ALCATEL LUCENT
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US8750287B2 publication Critical patent/US8750287B2/en
Assigned to ALCATEL LUCENT reassignment ALCATEL LUCENT RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CREDIT SUISSE AG
Assigned to CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKET SERVICES, LLC reassignment CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKET SERVICES, LLC SECURITY INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS, LLC, PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP, LLC
Assigned to NOKIA USA INC. reassignment NOKIA USA INC. SECURITY INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS, LLC, PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC
Assigned to PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC reassignment PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: ALCATEL LUCENT SAS, NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS BV, NOKIA TECHNOLOGIES OY
Assigned to NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC. reassignment NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC. ASSIGNMENT AND ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT Assignors: NOKIA USA INC.
Assigned to PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC reassignment PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC.
Assigned to PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC, PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC reassignment PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKETS SERVICES LLC
Assigned to RPX CORPORATION reassignment RPX CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current
Adjusted expiration legal-status Critical

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L45/00Routing or path finding of packets in data switching networks
    • H04L45/52Multiprotocol routers
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L45/00Routing or path finding of packets in data switching networks
    • H04L45/02Topology update or discovery
    • H04L45/04Interdomain routing, e.g. hierarchical routing
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L45/00Routing or path finding of packets in data switching networks
    • H04L45/42Centralised routing
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L45/00Routing or path finding of packets in data switching networks
    • H04L45/50Routing or path finding of packets in data switching networks using label swapping, e.g. multi-protocol label switch [MPLS]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L45/00Routing or path finding of packets in data switching networks
    • H04L45/64Routing or path finding of packets in data switching networks using an overlay routing layer
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L47/00Traffic control in data switching networks
    • H04L47/10Flow control; Congestion control
    • H04L47/12Avoiding congestion; Recovering from congestion
    • H04L47/125Avoiding congestion; Recovering from congestion by balancing the load, e.g. traffic engineering
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L47/00Traffic control in data switching networks
    • H04L47/70Admission control; Resource allocation
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L47/00Traffic control in data switching networks
    • H04L47/70Admission control; Resource allocation
    • H04L47/78Architectures of resource allocation
    • H04L47/782Hierarchical allocation of resources, e.g. involving a hierarchy of local and centralised entities
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L47/00Traffic control in data switching networks
    • H04L47/70Admission control; Resource allocation
    • H04L47/82Miscellaneous aspects
    • H04L47/825Involving tunnels, e.g. MPLS

Definitions

  • the invention relates to the technical field of inter-carrier telecommunications, i.e. telecommunications involving multiple service providers. More precisely, the invention relates to traffic-engineered connections across multiple resource domains owned by multiple service providers.
  • Telecommunication service providers are able to provide data services across their networks.
  • data services include multimedia connection services, synchronization distribution and signalling.
  • service providers can contract data transport services from other service providers.
  • a service provider who wishes to provide global IP virtual private network (VPN) services might contract transport services from access providers to reach enterprise sites that are not directly connected to the service provider's domain.
  • VPN virtual private network
  • the invention provides a method for establishing a traffic-engineered connection across resource domains for data transport, each of the resource domains being owned by an associated service provider, the method comprising:
  • the inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicates communication resources at an inter-carrier interface that make it possible to concatenate two intra-domain connection segments embodying adjacent service elements in the chain.
  • concatenation is achieved by transferring the resource identifier through a service layer without relying on signalling protocols, which avoids using signalling protocols at inter-carrier interfaces.
  • issues related to signalling message exchange between different domains can be avoided, such as inter-operability between the protocol stacks of each domain or policy rule synchronization between the domains.
  • the method may comprise one or more of the following features.
  • the inter-carrier communication resource identifier is sent to the service agent within a confirmation message indicating an availability of the first connection segment.
  • the inter-carrier communication resource identifier is transferred by the service agent within an activation request for requesting the second service provider to establish a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element.
  • the first service provider selects the first connection segment among a set of pre-computed connection segments embodying the service element.
  • the service provider pre-computes and stores one or more connection segments suitable for embodying the service element. This embodiment allows to speed up the connection segment selection. Some or all of the service providers can operate in this way.
  • the inter-carrier communication resource identifier may comprise, but is not limited to, any of the following information:
  • the service agent determines desired performance parameters for the connection and determines the chain of service elements as a function of the connectivity attributes of the service elements so as to match the desired performance parameters.
  • performance parameters may include bandwidth, delay, transmission protocols, transport protocols and others.
  • the service agent determines a service identifier for the connection and communicates the service identifier to the service providers associated to the service elements in the chain and the service providers associate the service identifier to connection segments embodying the service elements.
  • Service element edges may be specified in diverse ways.
  • service element edges are identified at a detailed level, e.g. at border node level or inter-carrier interface level. With such detailed service element edges, it may be possible to ascertain the existence of one or more inter-carrier interfaces between service element edges even before the service elements are instantiated and an intra-domain path of a connection segment is selected (e.g. during the composition phase).
  • service element edges are identified as border nodes and the service agent determines the chain of adjacent service elements as a function of border node adjacencies.
  • border nodes at the edges of a service element are specified in the service element and adjacencies between the border nodes of the respective service elements are taken into account by the service agent.
  • information about border node adjacencies can be made available to the service agent in diverse manners, e.g. through exterior gateway protocol engines such as BGP, or configuration files or in the service elements.
  • Embodiments with detailed service element edges make it possible to select multiple connection segments embodying multiple service elements of the chain in parallel with some guarantee that the resulting connection segments will be connectable through an inter-carrier interface between end points of the resulting connection segments, e.g. border nodes of the associated resource domains.
  • the service agent requests in parallel the first service provider associated to a service element in the chain and the second service provider associated to an adjacent service element in the chain to select respective connection segments between the border nodes identified in the respective service elements.
  • service element edges may be specified at a more abstracted level, e.g. at a domain level.
  • service element edges are identified as neighbour resource domains. Such abstraction may improve confidentiality of topology information relative to each resource domain.
  • service element edges specified as neighbour resource domains allow for more flexibility in the connection path computation since any of the border nodes interfacing with the cited neighbour resource domain can be considered for establishing a connection segment embodying the service element.
  • the service agent may not be able to define the end points of a connection segment already at the step of determining the chain of adjacent service elements (i.e. composition step). Therefore, an issue arises to ascertain the existence of an inter-carrier interface between the respective connection segments.
  • the first and second connection segments are selected in a sequential manner so as to satisfy this constraint.
  • the service agent transfers the inter-carrier communication resource identifier to the second service provider within a request for selecting a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element in the chain, and the second service provider selects the second connection segment as a function of the inter-carrier communication resource identifier so that the second connection segment ends at the inter-carrier interface indicated by the inter-carrier communication resource identifier.
  • the invention provides also a service agent for establishing a traffic-engineered connection across resource domains for data transport, each of the resource domains being owned by an associated service provider, the service agent comprising a processing module adapted to:
  • inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicating communication resources at an inter-carrier interface between the first connection segment and a resource domain associated to an adjacent service element in the chain
  • the invention provides also a service provider system for a service provider owning a resource domain and participating in a service provider alliance to establish inter-domain connections through the resource domain, the service provider system comprising:
  • control module adapted to detect an instantiation request comprising a service element identifier and a service identifier, select a connection segment embodying the service element within the resource domain, select an inter-carrier interface at an end point of the connection segment, reserve a communication resource at the inter-carrier interface, and communicate an inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicating the communication resources to the service agent in response to the instantiation request.
  • the invention provides also a service provider system for a service provider owning a resource domain and participating in a service provider alliance to establish inter-domain connections through the resource domain, the service provider system comprising:
  • control module adapted to detect an activation request comprising an inter-carrier communication resource identifier and a service identifier, determine a connection segment associated to the service identifier, said connection segment disposed within the resource domain, and concatenate the connection segment with a communication resource at an inter-carrier interface indicated by the inter-carrier communication resource identifier.
  • aspects of the invention are based on the observation that configuring inter-carrier connections through an abstracted service layer involves multiple communications between service providers, i.e. domain owners and a service agent in charge of composing a service from multiple elements. Aspects of the invention result in an efficient use of such communications to achieve inter-carrier connection establishment in a fast, reliable and/or secure way.
  • FIG. 1 illustrates a system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates a connection establishment in accordance with an example embodiment.
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a connection establishment in accordance with another example embodiment.
  • a connection refers to a communication channel through a communication system.
  • a path refers to a sequence of links and nodes suitable for communication.
  • a path is usually one attribute of a connection among others. However, the term “path” is sometimes used to refer to a connection itself.
  • Each service provider owns and operates a collection of network elements that will be referred to as the resource domain of the service provider.
  • Resource domains are schematically illustrated at numerals 10 , 20 and 30 . Topology and size of the shown resource domains are chosen arbitrarily for the purpose of illustration.
  • a resource domain may correspond to a standardized domain such as Autonomous System, Interior Gateway Protocol routing area, GMPLS overlay network, or to a plurality of such standardized domains under the responsibility of a single service provider.
  • the same numeral will be used to refer both to the service provider and to the associated resource domain.
  • network elements include a transport network nodes, access network nodes connected to residential subscribers in an area, content servers, caching devices, billing systems and authentication systems.
  • An inter-carrier interface is a physical interface between the resource domains of two service providers. More specifically, an ICI is a direct physical interface between two network elements that are owned and operated by two different service providers.
  • the ICI i 1 links border node 11 in domain 10 to border node 21 in domain 20
  • the ICI i 2 links border node 12 in domain 10 to border node 22 in domain 20
  • the ICI i 3 links border node 12 in domain 10 to border node 22 in domain 20 .
  • two ICIs i 4 and i 5 exist between domain 20 and domain 30 .
  • Each of the service providers 10 , 20 and 30 of the alliance manages its own domain with an associated service provider system shown at numerals 15 , 25 and 35 .
  • the service provider systems 15 , 25 and 35 interact through a service layer that is illustrated schematically at numeral 1 so as to configure and manage inter-domain connections under the supervision of a service agent 2 , as will be described herein below.
  • the service provider systems 15 , 25 and 35 may also include conventional intra-domain management functionality such as connection management, resource management, topology discovery, and other.
  • a service provider system may be implemented in a centralized or distributed manner.
  • FIG. 1 is only intended to give a high-level functional view of the system sufficient to understand example embodiments of the invention.
  • Each service provider 10 , 20 or 30 of the alliance may offer services, such as data transport services or content distribution to other service providers.
  • Service providers of the alliance advertise service through service elements, which is a standardized data structure. By comparing service elements, the service agent 2 can select which service elements work best to provide an end-to-end transmission.
  • Service elements comprise imprecise Traffic Engineering information, i.e. information that a service provider is willing to share with other service providers within the alliance.
  • the service agent 2 is an agent of the service layer, which does end-to-end service composition for end-customers of the alliance.
  • the service agent 2 may be a different entity from the service providers 10 , 20 and 30 .
  • the service agent 2 may be created as a third party intended to make critical decisions regarding the composition of inter-carrier services in a neutral and unbiased manner with respect to all service providers of the alliance.
  • the service providers 10 , 20 or 30 When one of the service providers 10 , 20 or 30 offers transit functionality to the other service providers, that service provider publishes a service element that is made accessible to service agent 2 .
  • the service providers 10 , 20 and 30 upload service elements into a data repository 3 , which can be organized as a service element directory.
  • a service element directory Diverse implementations suitable for such a service element directory are described in “Vue d′ensemble des implementings d′annuaire et de leur appliclie aux services inter- observations” A. Santin and H. Pouyllau, Acte des JDIR'09: 10 diags J to Doctorales en Informatique et Réseaux, pp 13-18.
  • the service agent is a role that any service provider participating in the alliance may take.
  • the service provider may become the service agent which buys service elements from other service providers of the alliance.
  • every service provider who is a member of the alliance may receive the service elements.
  • Each of the service providers 10 , 20 and 30 may publish a service element periodically, when an associated element is updated, when a malfunction in one of the associated resource domains 10 , 20 and 30 occurs, and when the service provider 10 , 20 or 30 receives a request to publish the service element from the service agent 2 .
  • Each of the service providers 10 , 20 and 30 publishes in its service elements the connectivity attributes the service provider offers between identified edges.
  • the service element identifies connectivity attributes across the associated resource domain.
  • the service element identifies the pairs of adjacencies between which the service provider provides connectivity with the associated connectivity attributes.
  • the connectivity attributes may include transmission protocols, including adaptation functions, if appropriate; commercial terms, such as price; service level agreement parameters, such as delay; and regulatory constraints. Further details about service elements can be found in “A Service Plane over the PCE Architecture for Automating Multidomain Connection-Oriented Services”, IEEE Communications Magazine, June 2008, pp 94-102.
  • the service provider 20 could publish the following service elements:
  • the service agent 2 communicates with, and therefore, may receive published service elements from, the service providers 10 , 20 and 30 . Based on the received service element identifying the connectivity services, the service agent 2 may select an end-to-end connection path matching a connection request from an end-customer. To select an end-to-end connection path, the service agent 2 uses a two step process.
  • the first step referred to as composition, includes selecting a chain of service elements from the respective service providers to be involved in the requested inter-carrier connection.
  • the second step referred to as instantiation, includes selecting a path inside the selected resource domains.
  • the ICIs to be used between the respective intra-domain connection segments may be selected in the first or second step, depending on the manner in which service element edges are defined.
  • the first step is a high-level path selection. Based on the edges and associated connectivity attributes in the service elements published by the service providers in the alliance system, service agent 2 selects the resource domains to use for transmitting data as the high-level path selection. For example, service agent 2 may select a path based on the transmission protocol and cost.
  • the second step is a detailed-level path selection that the service agent 2 executes in cooperation with the respective service providers.
  • Example embodiments of processes for establishing an inter-carrier connection in the system of FIG. 1 will be described below.
  • the operations mentioned e.g. shown in the flowchart of FIG. 2 or 3 , may be implemented as program modules or functional processes including routines, programs, objects, components, data structures, etc., that perform particular tasks or implement particular abstract data types and may be executed using existing hardware at existing network elements or control nodes.
  • Such existing hardware may include one or more Central Processing Units (CPUs), digital signal processors (DSPs), application-specific-integrated-circuits, field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) computers or the like.
  • CPUs Central Processing Units
  • DSPs digital signal processors
  • FPGAs field programmable gate arrays
  • the service agent 2 receives a request for establishing an inter-carrier connection, e.g. from an end-customer.
  • the request specifies characteristic features of the connection to be established, including source end-point or end-points, destination end-point or end-points and traffic-engineering requirements, if any e.g. bandwidth, delay, transmission protocol or other.
  • the service agent 2 retrieves service elements from data repository 3 and selects service elements adapted to fulfill the request. More precisely, service agent 2 composes a chain of adjacent service elements in view of the edges indicated in the service elements and knowledge of inter-carrier interfaces between the resource domains. If the request specifies further traffic-engineering requirements, SLA-related parameters specified in the service elements are taken into account in the composition step to prune service elements that may not meet the specified traffic-engineering requirements.
  • the composition step 42 is assumed to yield a chain of service elements that already specifies the ICIs which will be used by the connection. Namely, service elements with edges specified at ICI level have been selected, or service elements with edges specified at border node level have been selected and the service agent 2 knows the inter-carrier interfaces that connect the border nodes.
  • Source node 13 in domain 10
  • Destination node 33 in domain 30
  • service agent 2 takes into account the existence of ICIs i 1 and i 4 to determine that the selected service elements are actually adjacent.
  • service agent 2 also allocates an identifier SID to the connection request. This identifier can then be used in all transactions related to the request.
  • service agent sends an instantiation request INST to all service providers involved in the selected chain of service elements.
  • the instantiation request INST comprises the identifier SID and an identifier of the respective service element to be instantiated by the service provider system, namely a, b and c in the illustrated example.
  • a service provider system upon receiving the instantiation request, instantiates the identified service element. Namely, the service provider system determines a specific intra-domain connection path that embodies the connectivity attributes specified in the service element between the edges specified in the service element.
  • the connection paths selected at step 44 represent respective segments of the end-to-end connection that will be finally established when the process completes successfully.
  • diverse modules of the service provider system may be involved, e.g. path computation elements or routers.
  • service provider system 15 selects a path through nodes 13 , 16 and 11 ; service provider system 25 selects a path through nodes 21 , 26 and 23 ; and service provider system 35 selects a path through nodes 31 and 33 .
  • each service provider system or at least one of the provider systems receiving an instantiation request selects and reserves a communication resource at an ICI located at an end of the selected connection path, e.g. at the ingress end.
  • service provider system 35 reserves resources identified by an identifier ICR 3 at ingress ICI i 4 and service provider system 25 reserves resources identified by an identifier ICR 2 at ingress ICI i 1 .
  • each service provider system sends an instantiation response INST-RES to the service agent 2 to indicate that the instantiation of the respective service element has completed successfully.
  • an identifier of the communication resources is also included in the instantiation response.
  • system 25 transmits an instantiation response comprising identifier ICR 2 and system 35 transmits an instantiation response comprising identifier ICR 3 .
  • a service provider system could not instantiate a service element at step 44 , e.g. due to lack of resources, then the instantiation response INST-RES would indicate this, e.g. by means of a specific object or field or message type. Then the process could crank back to step 42 to try a different chain of service elements.
  • service agent 2 upon receiving the instantiation responses INST-RES, service agent 2 sends an activation request ACT to each of the service providers involved in the chain to have the service providers activate the selected connection segments.
  • service agent 2 forwards each inter-carrier communication resource identifier received at step 45 to the corresponding neighbour service provider system to have the service providers concatenate the respective connection segments using the identified communication resources.
  • An inter-carrier communication resource identifier may be forwarded within the activation request or in a separate message.
  • each service provider system receiving an activation request configures the nodes along the path to establish the connection segment within the associated resource domain. This may be accomplished using diverse techniques, e.g. distributed processes such as RSVP-TE signalling or centralized processes such as node configuration by a central network management device.
  • Each service provider system also forwards the inter-carrier communication resource identifier received at step 46 , if any, to a corresponding edge node of the resource domain, for the edge node to concatenate the intra-domain connection segment with the subsequent connection segment established in the neighbour resource domain.
  • service agent 2 forwards identifier ICR 2 to service provider system 15 at step 46 and service provider system 15 forwards identifier ICR 2 to edge node 11 at step 47 , for edge node 11 to concatenate the connection segment with the identified resources on ICI i 1 .
  • the inter-carrier communication resources identified by identifier ICR 2 have been reserved for edge node 21 to receive traffic.
  • edge node 21 is already prepared to receive traffic using the reserved resources.
  • edge node 11 gets prepared to send traffic using the reserved resources.
  • concatenation of the respective connection segments can be achieved without exchanging further signalling messages between edge nodes 11 and 21 .
  • a similar result is obtained between edge nodes 23 and 31 .
  • the resulting end-to-end inter-carrier connection 100 is fully established when step 47 is completed.
  • the communication resources at the ICI may encompass various types of resources, depending on the physical layer or layers implemented at the inter-carrier interface.
  • a communication resource can include a physical port or a physical medium connected to a port, such as an optical fibre, a waveguide, a coaxial cable, or an electrical cable or wire.
  • a communication resource can include an electromagnetic link, such as a radio link or a microwave link, or a frequency channel or a set of frequency channels on an electromagnetic link.
  • a communication resource can include an optical link, in any part of the spectrum, e.g. visible, infrared or ultraviolet, or a wavelength channel or a set of wavelength channels on an optical link.
  • a communication resource can include a timeslot or a set of timeslots on a TDM link, such as an optical link or a radio link or other electromagnetic links.
  • a communication resource can include a channel code of a Code Division Multiple Access link.
  • Various types of information may serve to identify a communication resource, depending on the type of the resource to be identified. The information in the instantiation response should identify the communication resource at the inter-carrier interface in a way that enables the neighbour service provider to concatenate the connection segments through the identified communication resource.
  • the communication resource identifier can be selected from a group comprising an MPLS or GMPLS Label, a physical link identifier, e.g.
  • a channel identifier e.g. for identifying a electromagnetic channel, a radio frequency channel, an optical wavelength channel or other, and a channel identifier identifying a channel or set of channels in a multiplex, e.g. a timeslot in a TDM signal or a wavelength in a WDM signal.
  • concatenating the respective connection segments may involve various operations at the edge nodes, including configuring an MPLS forwarding table, configuring an electronic or optical switch matrix and others.
  • service provider systems operate during an instantiation step to reserve a communication resource at an ICI located at an ingress interface of the associated resource domain.
  • service provider systems operate to reserve a communication resource at an ICI located at an egress interface of the associated resource domain.
  • a service provider system instantiating a transit service element may reserve communication resources at ICIs located at both ends of the connection path across the associated resource domain.
  • inter-carrier communication resources identifiers carried in messages INST-RES and ACT are implicitly referring to those edge nodes.
  • those messages may explicitly specify an edge node to which an inter-carrier communication resource identifier relates.
  • service provider system 25 sends an instantiation response comprising both identifier ICR 2 and an identifier for edge node 21 , e.g. an IP address.
  • Explicit identification of the edge nodes in the service layer messages is even more useful in embodiments in which the edge nodes of the connection path are not specified in the service elements selected at step 42 . This situation will be illustrated with reference to FIG. 3 .
  • FIG. 3 the same reference numerals as in FIG. 2 are used to refer to identical or similar steps and elements. Therefore, mostly differences with the process of FIG. 2 are highlighted below.
  • composition step 42 is assumed to yield a chain of service elements that does not specify the ICIs which will be used by the connection. Namely, service elements with edges specified at domain level have been selected. To illustrate such a situation, the following example is proposed:
  • Source node 13 in domain 10
  • Destination node 33 in domain 30
  • the instantiation step in each resource domain is performed sequentially, e.g. from egress to ingress as illustrated or the other way around, to ensure the existence of ICIs interconnecting the respective connection segments.
  • service provider system 35 selects a connection path that interfaces with the specified edge of the service element f i.e. domain 20 . For example, service provider system 35 selects a connection path that ends at ingress ICI i 4 .
  • service provider system 35 sends an instantiation response that specifies both the selected ingress ICI, namely i 4 and the selected resource identifier on the ingress ICI, namely ICR 3 .
  • service agent 2 sends provider system 25 an instantiation request that specifies the ICI i 4 selected by the previous service provider in the chain.
  • service provider system 25 selects a connection path under the constraint that the path will actually end at egress interface i 1 .
  • service provider system 25 sends an instantiation response that specifies both the selected ingress ICI, namely i 1 and the selected resource identifier on the ingress ICI, namely ICR 2 .
  • service agent 2 sends provider system 15 an instantiation request that specifies the ICI i 1 selected by the previous service provider in the chain.
  • service provider system 15 selects a connection path under the constraint that the path will actually end at egress interface i 1 .
  • steps 46 and 47 can be executed identically to FIG. 2 .
  • the instantiation step and activation step may be merged, e.g. for the sake of minimizing the number of messages exchanged between the service agent 2 and the service provider systems 15 , 25 and 35 .
  • each service provider performs step 47 immediately after step 44 , without waiting for an activation message from service agent 2 .
  • service agent 2 already includes the respective inter-carrier communication resource identifiers ICR 2 and ICR 3 in the instantiation requests sent at step 43 to service provider systems 25 and 15 respectively.
  • a service provider in order to facilitate and/or speed up the step of instantiating a service element at step 44 , can use a data repository in which a set of pre-computed connection paths embodying the respective service elements published by that service provider have been previously stored. Therefore, at step 44 , the service provider system only needs to retrieve a pre-computed connection path matching the desired service element number.
  • the pre-computation and storage of connection paths by a service provider is described in closer details in pending patent application FR2008055453 filed on 6 Aug. 2008. With some transport technologies, for example optical networks, it may take up to a few minutes to fully configure a connection segment across a resource domain. Therefore, relying on pre-computed and pre-established connection paths in some or all of the resource domains can save a substantial amount of time in the process of establishing an inter-carrier connection.
  • a connection segment in a resource domain is established as an MPLS or GMPLS Label Switched Path (LSP).
  • LSP stitching can be used to concatenate multiple LSPs.
  • the edge node of a resource domain uses the inter-carrier communication resource identifier at step 47 to perform LSP stitching operations, so as to concatenate two adjacent LSPs.
  • the inter-carrier communication resource identifier comprises an MPLS or GMPLS label. Service providers may define in advance a set of labels that may be used on an ICI for inter-carrier connections so as to improve resource management. Then, at step 44 , the inter-carrier communication resource identifier can be chosen within the predefined set.
  • connection segment establishment may rely on intra-domain RSVP-TE signalling or other techniques, e.g. configuration by a domain-level network management device.

Abstract

A method for establishing a connection across resource domains comprises determining source and destination end-points for the connection; determining, by a service agent, a chain of adjacent service elements suitable for joining the source and destination end-points based on the identified edges; requesting, by the service agent, a first service provider associated to a service element in the chain to select a first connection segment embodying the service element; receiving, by the service agent, an inter-carrier communication resource identifier from the first service provider, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicating communication resources at an inter-carrier interface between an end point of the first connection segment and a resource domain associated to an adjacent service element in the chain; and transferring, by the service agent, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier to a second service provider associated to the adjacent service element.

Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The invention relates to the technical field of inter-carrier telecommunications, i.e. telecommunications involving multiple service providers. More precisely, the invention relates to traffic-engineered connections across multiple resource domains owned by multiple service providers.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Telecommunication service providers are able to provide data services across their networks. For example, data services include multimedia connection services, synchronization distribution and signalling. In order to increase the area over which data may be transmitted, service providers can contract data transport services from other service providers. For example, a service provider who wishes to provide global IP virtual private network (VPN) services might contract transport services from access providers to reach enterprise sites that are not directly connected to the service provider's domain.
With an increased need for fast service delivery, service providers have an incentive to establish a cross-provider service layer that allows them to interact and buy each other's services through an automated process. An implementation of such service layer among an alliance of service providers has been proposed for example by Douville et al. in “A Service Plane over the PCE Architecture for Automating Multidomain Connection-Oriented Services”, IEEE Communications Magazine, June 2008, pp 94-102.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In an embodiment, the invention provides a method for establishing a traffic-engineered connection across resource domains for data transport, each of the resource domains being owned by an associated service provider, the method comprising:
determining, by a service agent, source and destination end-points for the connection,
receiving, by the service agent, a service element from each of the service providers, the service element identifying edges of a resource domain owned by the associated service provider and connectivity attributes specifying connectivity provided by the service provider between said edges,
determining, by the service agent, a chain of adjacent service elements suitable for joining the source and destination end-points based on the identified edges,
requesting, by the service agent, a first service provider associated to a service element in the chain to select a first connection segment embodying the service element,
receiving, by the service agent, an inter-carrier communication resource identifier from the first service provider, said inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicating communication resources at an inter-carrier interface between an end point of the first connection segment and a resource domain associated to an adjacent service element in the chain,
transferring, by the service agent, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier to a second service provider associated to the adjacent service element.
The inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicates communication resources at an inter-carrier interface that make it possible to concatenate two intra-domain connection segments embodying adjacent service elements in the chain. In embodiments, such concatenation is achieved by transferring the resource identifier through a service layer without relying on signalling protocols, which avoids using signalling protocols at inter-carrier interfaces. Hence, issues related to signalling message exchange between different domains can be avoided, such as inter-operability between the protocol stacks of each domain or policy rule synchronization between the domains.
In accordance with embodiments, the method may comprise one or more of the following features.
In an embodiment, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier is sent to the service agent within a confirmation message indicating an availability of the first connection segment.
In an embodiment, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier is transferred by the service agent within an activation request for requesting the second service provider to establish a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element.
In an embodiment, the first service provider selects the first connection segment among a set of pre-computed connection segments embodying the service element. In an embodiment, for each of the service element exposed by a service provider to the service agent, the service provider pre-computes and stores one or more connection segments suitable for embodying the service element. This embodiment allows to speed up the connection segment selection. Some or all of the service providers can operate in this way.
In embodiments, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier may comprise, but is not limited to, any of the following information:
    • a Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) label,
    • a Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) label,
    • a class of DiffSery (as per RFC3260),
    • a couple (MPLS or GMPLS label, IP address),
    • a couple (MPLS or GMPLS label, interface ID),
    • a couple (GMPLS label, GMPLS Explicit Route Object),
    • an n-tuple of data allowing to identify network resources between two adjacent carriers.
In an embodiment, the service agent determines desired performance parameters for the connection and determines the chain of service elements as a function of the connectivity attributes of the service elements so as to match the desired performance parameters. Such performance parameters may include bandwidth, delay, transmission protocols, transport protocols and others.
In an embodiment, the service agent determines a service identifier for the connection and communicates the service identifier to the service providers associated to the service elements in the chain and the service providers associate the service identifier to connection segments embodying the service elements.
Service element edges may be specified in diverse ways. In embodiments, service element edges are identified at a detailed level, e.g. at border node level or inter-carrier interface level. With such detailed service element edges, it may be possible to ascertain the existence of one or more inter-carrier interfaces between service element edges even before the service elements are instantiated and an intra-domain path of a connection segment is selected (e.g. during the composition phase).
In a corresponding embodiment, service element edges are identified as border nodes and the service agent determines the chain of adjacent service elements as a function of border node adjacencies. In this embodiment, border nodes at the edges of a service element are specified in the service element and adjacencies between the border nodes of the respective service elements are taken into account by the service agent. For example, information about border node adjacencies can be made available to the service agent in diverse manners, e.g. through exterior gateway protocol engines such as BGP, or configuration files or in the service elements.
Embodiments with detailed service element edges make it possible to select multiple connection segments embodying multiple service elements of the chain in parallel with some guarantee that the resulting connection segments will be connectable through an inter-carrier interface between end points of the resulting connection segments, e.g. border nodes of the associated resource domains. In a corresponding embodiment, the service agent requests in parallel the first service provider associated to a service element in the chain and the second service provider associated to an adjacent service element in the chain to select respective connection segments between the border nodes identified in the respective service elements.
In alternative embodiments, service element edges may be specified at a more abstracted level, e.g. at a domain level. In a corresponding embodiment, service element edges are identified as neighbour resource domains. Such abstraction may improve confidentiality of topology information relative to each resource domain. Moreover, service element edges specified as neighbour resource domains allow for more flexibility in the connection path computation since any of the border nodes interfacing with the cited neighbour resource domain can be considered for establishing a connection segment embodying the service element.
In such abstracted service element edges, the service agent may not be able to define the end points of a connection segment already at the step of determining the chain of adjacent service elements (i.e. composition step). Therefore, an issue arises to ascertain the existence of an inter-carrier interface between the respective connection segments. In embodiments, the first and second connection segments are selected in a sequential manner so as to satisfy this constraint.
In a corresponding embodiment, the service agent transfers the inter-carrier communication resource identifier to the second service provider within a request for selecting a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element in the chain, and the second service provider selects the second connection segment as a function of the inter-carrier communication resource identifier so that the second connection segment ends at the inter-carrier interface indicated by the inter-carrier communication resource identifier.
The invention provides also a service agent for establishing a traffic-engineered connection across resource domains for data transport, each of the resource domains being owned by an associated service provider, the service agent comprising a processing module adapted to:
determine source and destination end-points for the connection,
receive a service element from each of the service providers, the service element identifying edges of a resource domain owned by the associated service provider and connectivity attributes specifying connectivity provided by the service provider between said edges,
determine a chain of adjacent service elements suitable for joining the source and destination end-points based on the identified edges,
request a first service provider associated to a service element in the chain to select a first connection segment embodying the service element,
receive an inter-carrier communication resource identifier from the first service provider, said inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicating communication resources at an inter-carrier interface between the first connection segment and a resource domain associated to an adjacent service element in the chain, and
transfer the inter-carrier communication resource identifier to a second service provider associated to the adjacent service element.
The invention provides also a service provider system for a service provider owning a resource domain and participating in a service provider alliance to establish inter-domain connections through the resource domain, the service provider system comprising:
an interface for communicating with a service agent,
a control module adapted to detect an instantiation request comprising a service element identifier and a service identifier, select a connection segment embodying the service element within the resource domain, select an inter-carrier interface at an end point of the connection segment, reserve a communication resource at the inter-carrier interface, and communicate an inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicating the communication resources to the service agent in response to the instantiation request.
The invention provides also a service provider system for a service provider owning a resource domain and participating in a service provider alliance to establish inter-domain connections through the resource domain, the service provider system comprising:
an interface for communicating with a service agent,
a control module adapted to detect an activation request comprising an inter-carrier communication resource identifier and a service identifier, determine a connection segment associated to the service identifier, said connection segment disposed within the resource domain, and concatenate the connection segment with a communication resource at an inter-carrier interface indicated by the inter-carrier communication resource identifier.
Aspects of the invention are based on the observation that configuring inter-carrier connections through an abstracted service layer involves multiple communications between service providers, i.e. domain owners and a service agent in charge of composing a service from multiple elements. Aspects of the invention result in an efficient use of such communications to achieve inter-carrier connection establishment in a fast, reliable and/or secure way.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter, by way of example, with reference to the drawings.
FIG. 1 illustrates a system in accordance with an embodiment of the invention.
FIG. 2 illustrates a connection establishment in accordance with an example embodiment.
FIG. 3 illustrates a connection establishment in accordance with another example embodiment.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
A connection refers to a communication channel through a communication system. A path refers to a sequence of links and nodes suitable for communication. A path is usually one attribute of a connection among others. However, the term “path” is sometimes used to refer to a connection itself.
Referring to FIG. 1, multiple service providers participate in an alliance to provide data transport services with inter-domain reach. Each service provider owns and operates a collection of network elements that will be referred to as the resource domain of the service provider. Resource domains are schematically illustrated at numerals 10, 20 and 30. Topology and size of the shown resource domains are chosen arbitrarily for the purpose of illustration. A resource domain may correspond to a standardized domain such as Autonomous System, Interior Gateway Protocol routing area, GMPLS overlay network, or to a plurality of such standardized domains under the responsibility of a single service provider. Herein below, the same numeral will be used to refer both to the service provider and to the associated resource domain. Examples of network elements include a transport network nodes, access network nodes connected to residential subscribers in an area, content servers, caching devices, billing systems and authentication systems.
Some border nodes in the resource domains of the alliance are interconnected through inter-carrier interfaces so that connections can be established across multiple domains. An inter-carrier interface (ICI) is a physical interface between the resource domains of two service providers. More specifically, an ICI is a direct physical interface between two network elements that are owned and operated by two different service providers. In FIG. 1, the ICI i1 links border node 11 in domain 10 to border node 21 in domain 20, the ICI i2 links border node 12 in domain 10 to border node 22 in domain 20 and the ICI i3 links border node 12 in domain 10 to border node 22 in domain 20. Similarly, two ICIs i4 and i5 exist between domain 20 and domain 30.
Each of the service providers 10, 20 and 30 of the alliance manages its own domain with an associated service provider system shown at numerals 15, 25 and 35. The service provider systems 15, 25 and 35 interact through a service layer that is illustrated schematically at numeral 1 so as to configure and manage inter-domain connections under the supervision of a service agent 2, as will be described herein below. The service provider systems 15, 25 and 35 may also include conventional intra-domain management functionality such as connection management, resource management, topology discovery, and other. A service provider system may be implemented in a centralized or distributed manner. FIG. 1 is only intended to give a high-level functional view of the system sufficient to understand example embodiments of the invention.
Each service provider 10, 20 or 30 of the alliance may offer services, such as data transport services or content distribution to other service providers. Service providers of the alliance advertise service through service elements, which is a standardized data structure. By comparing service elements, the service agent 2 can select which service elements work best to provide an end-to-end transmission. Service elements comprise imprecise Traffic Engineering information, i.e. information that a service provider is willing to share with other service providers within the alliance.
The service agent 2 is an agent of the service layer, which does end-to-end service composition for end-customers of the alliance. The service agent 2 may be a different entity from the service providers 10, 20 and 30. For example, the service agent 2 may be created as a third party intended to make critical decisions regarding the composition of inter-carrier services in a neutral and unbiased manner with respect to all service providers of the alliance.
When one of the service providers 10, 20 or 30 offers transit functionality to the other service providers, that service provider publishes a service element that is made accessible to service agent 2. For example, in FIG. 1, the service providers 10, 20 and 30 upload service elements into a data repository 3, which can be organized as a service element directory. Diverse implementations suitable for such a service element directory are described in “Vue d′ensemble des mécanismes d′annuaire et de leur applicabilité aux services inter-opérateurs” A. Santin and H. Pouyllau, Acte des JDIR'09: 10 èmes Journées Doctorales en Informatique et Réseaux, pp 13-18.
Alternatively, the service agent is a role that any service provider participating in the alliance may take. For example, when a service provider wants to offer a service to the service provider's residential or enterprise customers for whom the service provider needs to subcontract service from other service providers, the service provider may become the service agent which buys service elements from other service providers of the alliance. In such case, every service provider who is a member of the alliance may receive the service elements. However, it is possible for a service provider to publish service elements only to a subset of the service providers in the alliance.
Each of the service providers 10, 20 and 30 may publish a service element periodically, when an associated element is updated, when a malfunction in one of the associated resource domains 10, 20 and 30 occurs, and when the service provider 10, 20 or 30 receives a request to publish the service element from the service agent 2.
Each of the service providers 10, 20 and 30 publishes in its service elements the connectivity attributes the service provider offers between identified edges. The service element identifies connectivity attributes across the associated resource domain. The service element identifies the pairs of adjacencies between which the service provider provides connectivity with the associated connectivity attributes. The connectivity attributes may include transmission protocols, including adaptation functions, if appropriate; commercial terms, such as price; service level agreement parameters, such as delay; and regulatory constraints. Further details about service elements can be found in “A Service Plane over the PCE Architecture for Automating Multidomain Connection-Oriented Services”, IEEE Communications Magazine, June 2008, pp 94-102.
In the example illustrated in FIG. 1, the service provider 20 could publish the following service elements:
    • 1. node 21-node 23:
      • Transmission protocol: Ethernet
      • Commercial terms
      • Regulatory constraints
      • SLA-related parameters
        Example 1 illustrates a service element with edges defined at border node level.
    • 2. domain 10-domain 30:
      • Transmission protocol: MPLS
      • Commercial terms
      • Regulatory constraints
      • SLA-related parameters
        Example 2 illustrates a service element with edges defined at neighbour domain level.
    • 3. interface i2-interface i5:
      • Transmission protocol: MPLS
      • Commercial terms
      • Regulatory constraints
      • SLA-related parameters
        Example 3 illustrates a service element with edges defined at inter-carrier interface level.
The service agent 2 communicates with, and therefore, may receive published service elements from, the service providers 10, 20 and 30. Based on the received service element identifying the connectivity services, the service agent 2 may select an end-to-end connection path matching a connection request from an end-customer. To select an end-to-end connection path, the service agent 2 uses a two step process. The first step, referred to as composition, includes selecting a chain of service elements from the respective service providers to be involved in the requested inter-carrier connection. The second step, referred to as instantiation, includes selecting a path inside the selected resource domains. The ICIs to be used between the respective intra-domain connection segments may be selected in the first or second step, depending on the manner in which service element edges are defined.
The first step is a high-level path selection. Based on the edges and associated connectivity attributes in the service elements published by the service providers in the alliance system, service agent 2 selects the resource domains to use for transmitting data as the high-level path selection. For example, service agent 2 may select a path based on the transmission protocol and cost. The second step is a detailed-level path selection that the service agent 2 executes in cooperation with the respective service providers.
Example embodiments of processes for establishing an inter-carrier connection in the system of FIG. 1 will be described below. In the following description, the operations mentioned, e.g. shown in the flowchart of FIG. 2 or 3, may be implemented as program modules or functional processes including routines, programs, objects, components, data structures, etc., that perform particular tasks or implement particular abstract data types and may be executed using existing hardware at existing network elements or control nodes. Such existing hardware may include one or more Central Processing Units (CPUs), digital signal processors (DSPs), application-specific-integrated-circuits, field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) computers or the like.
With reference to FIG. 2, at step 41, the service agent 2 receives a request for establishing an inter-carrier connection, e.g. from an end-customer. The request specifies characteristic features of the connection to be established, including source end-point or end-points, destination end-point or end-points and traffic-engineering requirements, if any e.g. bandwidth, delay, transmission protocol or other.
At step 42, the service agent 2 retrieves service elements from data repository 3 and selects service elements adapted to fulfill the request. More precisely, service agent 2 composes a chain of adjacent service elements in view of the edges indicated in the service elements and knowledge of inter-carrier interfaces between the resource domains. If the request specifies further traffic-engineering requirements, SLA-related parameters specified in the service elements are taken into account in the composition step to prune service elements that may not meet the specified traffic-engineering requirements.
In the embodiment of FIG. 2, the composition step 42 is assumed to yield a chain of service elements that already specifies the ICIs which will be used by the connection. Namely, service elements with edges specified at ICI level have been selected, or service elements with edges specified at border node level have been selected and the service agent 2 knows the inter-carrier interfaces that connect the border nodes.
To illustrate such a situation, the following example is proposed:
Request:
Source=node 13 in domain 10, Destination=node 33 in domain 30
Selected chain of service elements:
    • a. Element published by provider 10: Edges=node 13-node 11, SLA-related parameters suitable for the request.
    • b. Element published by provider 20: Edges=node 21-node 23, SLA-related parameters suitable for the request.
    • c. Element published by provider 30: Edges=node 31-node 33, SLA-related parameters suitable for the request.
In the composition step, service agent 2 takes into account the existence of ICIs i1 and i4 to determine that the selected service elements are actually adjacent. At step 42, service agent 2 also allocates an identifier SID to the connection request. This identifier can then be used in all transactions related to the request.
At step 43, service agent sends an instantiation request INST to all service providers involved in the selected chain of service elements. The instantiation request INST comprises the identifier SID and an identifier of the respective service element to be instantiated by the service provider system, namely a, b and c in the illustrated example.
At step 44, upon receiving the instantiation request, a service provider system instantiates the identified service element. Namely, the service provider system determines a specific intra-domain connection path that embodies the connectivity attributes specified in the service element between the edges specified in the service element. The connection paths selected at step 44 represent respective segments of the end-to-end connection that will be finally established when the process completes successfully. At step 44, diverse modules of the service provider system may be involved, e.g. path computation elements or routers.
For example, at step 44, service provider system 15 selects a path through nodes 13, 16 and 11; service provider system 25 selects a path through nodes 21, 26 and 23; and service provider system 35 selects a path through nodes 31 and 33.
Also at step 44, each service provider system or at least one of the provider systems receiving an instantiation request selects and reserves a communication resource at an ICI located at an end of the selected connection path, e.g. at the ingress end. For example, service provider system 35 reserves resources identified by an identifier ICR3 at ingress ICI i4 and service provider system 25 reserves resources identified by an identifier ICR2 at ingress ICI i1.
Then, at step 45, each service provider system sends an instantiation response INST-RES to the service agent 2 to indicate that the instantiation of the respective service element has completed successfully. When inter-carrier communication resources have been reserved by a service provider system at step 44, an identifier of the communication resources is also included in the instantiation response. In the illustrated example, at step 45, system 25 transmits an instantiation response comprising identifier ICR2 and system 35 transmits an instantiation response comprising identifier ICR3.
If a service provider system could not instantiate a service element at step 44, e.g. due to lack of resources, then the instantiation response INST-RES would indicate this, e.g. by means of a specific object or field or message type. Then the process could crank back to step 42 to try a different chain of service elements.
At step 46, upon receiving the instantiation responses INST-RES, service agent 2 sends an activation request ACT to each of the service providers involved in the chain to have the service providers activate the selected connection segments. In addition, service agent 2 forwards each inter-carrier communication resource identifier received at step 45 to the corresponding neighbour service provider system to have the service providers concatenate the respective connection segments using the identified communication resources. An inter-carrier communication resource identifier may be forwarded within the activation request or in a separate message.
At step 47, each service provider system receiving an activation request configures the nodes along the path to establish the connection segment within the associated resource domain. This may be accomplished using diverse techniques, e.g. distributed processes such as RSVP-TE signalling or centralized processes such as node configuration by a central network management device. Each service provider system also forwards the inter-carrier communication resource identifier received at step 46, if any, to a corresponding edge node of the resource domain, for the edge node to concatenate the intra-domain connection segment with the subsequent connection segment established in the neighbour resource domain. Namely, in the illustrated example, service agent 2 forwards identifier ICR2 to service provider system 15 at step 46 and service provider system 15 forwards identifier ICR2 to edge node 11 at step 47, for edge node 11 to concatenate the connection segment with the identified resources on ICI i1.
At step 44, the inter-carrier communication resources identified by identifier ICR2 have been reserved for edge node 21 to receive traffic. Hence edge node 21 is already prepared to receive traffic using the reserved resources. Then upon receiving identifier ICR2, edge node 11 gets prepared to send traffic using the reserved resources. Hence concatenation of the respective connection segments can be achieved without exchanging further signalling messages between edge nodes 11 and 21. A similar result is obtained between edge nodes 23 and 31. Hence, the resulting end-to-end inter-carrier connection 100 is fully established when step 47 is completed.
According to embodiments, the communication resources at the ICI may encompass various types of resources, depending on the physical layer or layers implemented at the inter-carrier interface. A communication resource can include a physical port or a physical medium connected to a port, such as an optical fibre, a waveguide, a coaxial cable, or an electrical cable or wire. A communication resource can include an electromagnetic link, such as a radio link or a microwave link, or a frequency channel or a set of frequency channels on an electromagnetic link. A communication resource can include an optical link, in any part of the spectrum, e.g. visible, infrared or ultraviolet, or a wavelength channel or a set of wavelength channels on an optical link. A communication resource can include a timeslot or a set of timeslots on a TDM link, such as an optical link or a radio link or other electromagnetic links. A communication resource can include a channel code of a Code Division Multiple Access link. Various types of information may serve to identify a communication resource, depending on the type of the resource to be identified. The information in the instantiation response should identify the communication resource at the inter-carrier interface in a way that enables the neighbour service provider to concatenate the connection segments through the identified communication resource. For that purpose, the communication resource identifier can be selected from a group comprising an MPLS or GMPLS Label, a physical link identifier, e.g. an IP address or an IP prefix or a link number having local significance at a network element, a channel identifier, e.g. for identifying a electromagnetic channel, a radio frequency channel, an optical wavelength channel or other, and a channel identifier identifying a channel or set of channels in a multiplex, e.g. a timeslot in a TDM signal or a wavelength in a WDM signal.
Accordingly, depending on the transmission techniques used in the data plane, concatenating the respective connection segments may involve various operations at the edge nodes, including configuring an MPLS forwarding table, configuring an electronic or optical switch matrix and others.
In the above example, service provider systems operate during an instantiation step to reserve a communication resource at an ICI located at an ingress interface of the associated resource domain. However, a similar process can be implemented wherein service provider systems operate to reserve a communication resource at an ICI located at an egress interface of the associated resource domain. Alternatively, a service provider system instantiating a transit service element may reserve communication resources at ICIs located at both ends of the connection path across the associated resource domain. Those alternative embodiments provide similar advantages in terms of speeding up the connection establishment and/or avoiding signalling transactions at inter-carrier hops.
In the example of FIG. 2, it is assumed that the edge nodes of the connection path are specified in the service elements selected at step 42. Therefore, inter-carrier communication resources identifiers carried in messages INST-RES and ACT are implicitly referring to those edge nodes. Alternatively, those messages may explicitly specify an edge node to which an inter-carrier communication resource identifier relates. For example, at step 45, service provider system 25 sends an instantiation response comprising both identifier ICR2 and an identifier for edge node 21, e.g. an IP address. Explicit identification of the edge nodes in the service layer messages is even more useful in embodiments in which the edge nodes of the connection path are not specified in the service elements selected at step 42. This situation will be illustrated with reference to FIG. 3.
In FIG. 3, the same reference numerals as in FIG. 2 are used to refer to identical or similar steps and elements. Therefore, mostly differences with the process of FIG. 2 are highlighted below.
In the embodiment of FIG. 3, the composition step 42 is assumed to yield a chain of service elements that does not specify the ICIs which will be used by the connection. Namely, service elements with edges specified at domain level have been selected. To illustrate such a situation, the following example is proposed:
Request:
Source=node 13 in domain 10, Destination=node 33 in domain 30
Selected chain of service elements:
    • d. Element published by provider 10: Edges=node 13-domain 20, SLA-related parameters suitable for the request.
    • e. Element published by provider 20: Edges=domain 10-domain 30, SLA-related parameters suitable for the request.
    • f. Element published by provider 30: Edges=domain 20-node 33, SLA-related parameters suitable for the request.
In this case, the instantiation step in each resource domain is performed sequentially, e.g. from egress to ingress as illustrated or the other way around, to ensure the existence of ICIs interconnecting the respective connection segments.
At step 44, service provider system 35 selects a connection path that interfaces with the specified edge of the service element f i.e. domain 20. For example, service provider system 35 selects a connection path that ends at ingress ICI i4. At step 45, service provider system 35 sends an instantiation response that specifies both the selected ingress ICI, namely i4 and the selected resource identifier on the ingress ICI, namely ICR3.
At step 43, service agent 2 sends provider system 25 an instantiation request that specifies the ICI i4 selected by the previous service provider in the chain. Hence at step 44 service provider system 25 selects a connection path under the constraint that the path will actually end at egress interface i1. Similarly, at step 45, service provider system 25 sends an instantiation response that specifies both the selected ingress ICI, namely i1 and the selected resource identifier on the ingress ICI, namely ICR2.
At step 43, service agent 2 sends provider system 15 an instantiation request that specifies the ICI i1 selected by the previous service provider in the chain. Hence at step 44 service provider system 15 selects a connection path under the constraint that the path will actually end at egress interface i1.
The rest of the process, namely steps 46 and 47 can be executed identically to FIG. 2.
In a modification of the embodiment of FIG. 3, the instantiation step and activation step may be merged, e.g. for the sake of minimizing the number of messages exchanged between the service agent 2 and the service provider systems 15, 25 and 35. In that case, each service provider performs step 47 immediately after step 44, without waiting for an activation message from service agent 2. To do so, service agent 2 already includes the respective inter-carrier communication resource identifiers ICR2 and ICR3 in the instantiation requests sent at step 43 to service provider systems 25 and 15 respectively.
In an embodiment, in order to facilitate and/or speed up the step of instantiating a service element at step 44, a service provider can use a data repository in which a set of pre-computed connection paths embodying the respective service elements published by that service provider have been previously stored. Therefore, at step 44, the service provider system only needs to retrieve a pre-computed connection path matching the desired service element number. The pre-computation and storage of connection paths by a service provider is described in closer details in pending patent application FR2008055453 filed on 6 Aug. 2008. With some transport technologies, for example optical networks, it may take up to a few minutes to fully configure a connection segment across a resource domain. Therefore, relying on pre-computed and pre-established connection paths in some or all of the resource domains can save a substantial amount of time in the process of establishing an inter-carrier connection.
In embodiments, a connection segment in a resource domain is established as an MPLS or GMPLS Label Switched Path (LSP). Techniques known as LSP stitching can be used to concatenate multiple LSPs. In a corresponding embodiment, the edge node of a resource domain uses the inter-carrier communication resource identifier at step 47 to perform LSP stitching operations, so as to concatenate two adjacent LSPs. In this embodiment the inter-carrier communication resource identifier comprises an MPLS or GMPLS label. Service providers may define in advance a set of labels that may be used on an ICI for inter-carrier connections so as to improve resource management. Then, at step 44, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier can be chosen within the predefined set.
By transferring an inter-carrier communication resource identifier via the service layer between adjacent service provider systems, embodiments of the invention make it possible to concatenate connection segments without performing RSVP-TE signalling operations between edge nodes belonging to different service providers. Such transfer can be used at one or each of the inter-carrier hops of an end-to-end inter-carrier connection. Also, within one or each of the resource domains involved in an end-to-end inter-carrier connection, connection segment establishment may rely on intra-domain RSVP-TE signalling or other techniques, e.g. configuration by a domain-level network management device.
The invention is not limited to the described embodiments. The appended claims are to be construed as embodying all modification and alternative constructions that may be occurred to one skilled in the art, which fairly fall within the basic teaching here, set forth.
The use of the verb “to comprise” or “to include” and its conjugations does not exclude the presence of elements or steps other than those stated in a claim. Furthermore, the use of the article “a” or “an” preceding an element or step does not exclude the presence of a plurality of such elements or steps. The invention may be implemented by means of hardware as well as software. The same item of hardware 10 may represent several modules.
In the claims, any reference signs placed between parentheses shall not be construed as limiting the scope of the claims.

Claims (14)

The invention claimed is:
1. A method for establishing a traffic-engineered connection across resource domains for data transport, each of the resource domains being owned by an associated service provider, the method comprising the steps of:
determining, by a service agent, source and destination end-points for the connection;
receiving, by the service agent, a service element from each associated service provider, the service element identifying edges of a resource domain owned by the associated service provider and connectivity attributes specifying connectivity provided by the associated service provider between the edges;
determining, by the service agent, a chain of adjacent service elements suitable for joining the source and destination end-points based on the identified edges;
requesting, by the service agent, a first service provider associated to a service element in the chain to select a first connection segment embodying the service element;
receiving, by the service agent, an inter-carrier communication resource identifier from the first service provider, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicating communication resources at an inter-carrier interface between an end point of the first connection segment and a resource domain associated to an adjacent service element in the chain; and
transferring, by the service agent, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier to a second service provider associated to the adjacent service element within a request to select a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element in the chain.
2. The method in accordance with claim 1, further comprising the step of receiving, by the service agent, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier within a confirmation message to indicate an availability of the first connection segment.
3. The method in accordance with claim 1, further comprising the step of transferring, by the service agent, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier within an activation request to request the second service provider to establish a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element.
4. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein service element edges are identified as border nodes, the service agent determining the chain of adjacent service elements as a function of border node adjacencies.
5. The method in accordance with claim 1, further comprising the step of requesting, by the service agent in parallel, the first service provider associated to a service element in the chain and the second service provider associated to an adjacent service element in the chain to select respective connection segments between the border nodes identified in the respective service elements.
6. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein service element edges are identified as neighbour resource domains.
7. The method in accordance with claim 6, wherein the second service provider selects the second connection segment as a function of the inter-carrier communication resource identifier so that the second connection segment ends at the inter-carrier interface indicated by the inter-carrier communication resource identifier.
8. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein the first service provider selects the first connection segment within a set of pre-computed connection segments embodying the service element.
9. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein the inter-carrier communication resource identifier comprises a Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) label or a Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) label.
10. The method in accordance with claim 1, further comprising the steps of:
determining, by the service agent, desired performance parameters for the connection; and
determining, by the service agent, the chain of service elements as a function of the connectivity attributes of the service elements so as to match the desired performance parameters.
11. The method in accordance with claim 1, wherein the service agent determines a service identifier for the connection and communicates the service identifier to the service providers associated to the service elements in the chain, and the service providers associate the service identifier to connection segments embodying the service elements.
12. A service agent for establishing a traffic-engineered connection across resource domains for data transport, each of the resource domains being owned by an associated service provider, the service agent comprising a processor adapted to:
determine source and destination end-points for the connection;
receive a service element from each associated service provider, wherein the service element identifies edges of a resource domain owned by the associated service provider and connectivity attributes that specify connectivity provided by the associated service provider between the edges,
determine a chain of adjacent service elements suitable to join the source and destination end-points based on the identified edges;
request a first service provider associated to a service element in the chain to select a first connection segment that embodies the service element;
receive an inter-carrier communication resource identifier from the first service provider, the inter-carrier communication resource identifier indicating communication resources at an inter-carrier interface between the first connection segment and a resource domain associated to an adjacent service element in the chain; and
transfer the inter-carrier communication resource identifier to a second service provider associated to the adjacent service element within a request to select a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element in the chain.
13. A service provider system for a service provider owning a resource domain and participating in a service provider alliance to establish inter-domain connections through the resource domain, the service provider system comprising:
an interface to communicate with a service agent; and
a control device adapted to detect an instantiation request comprising a service element identifier and a service identifier, select a connection segment embodying the service element within the resource domain, select an inter-carrier interface at an end point of the connection segment, reserve a communication resource at the inter-carrier interface, and communicate an inter-carrier communication resource identifier that indicates the communication resources to the service agent in response to the instantiation request within a request to select a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element in the chain.
14. A service provider system for a service provider owning a resource domain and participating in a service provider alliance to establish inter-domain connections through the resource domain, the service provider system comprising:
an interface to communicate with a service agent; and
a control device adapted to detect an activation request comprising an inter-carrier communication resource identifier and a service identifier, determine a connection segment associated to the service identifier, the connection segment disposed within the resource domain, and concatenate the connection segment with a communication resource at an inter-carrier interface indicated by the inter-carrier communication resource identifier within a request to select a second connection segment embodying the adjacent service element in the chain.
US13/265,963 2009-05-06 2010-03-15 Traffic-engineered connection establishment across resource domains for data transport Expired - Fee Related US8750287B2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP09305402 2009-05-06
EP09305402.1 2009-05-06
EP20090305402 EP2249525B1 (en) 2009-05-06 2009-05-06 Traffic-engineered connection establishment across resource domains for data transport
PCT/EP2010/053244 WO2010127893A1 (en) 2009-05-06 2010-03-15 Traffic-engineered connection establishment across resource domains for data transport

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20120051221A1 US20120051221A1 (en) 2012-03-01
US8750287B2 true US8750287B2 (en) 2014-06-10

Family

ID=40933611

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13/265,963 Expired - Fee Related US8750287B2 (en) 2009-05-06 2010-03-15 Traffic-engineered connection establishment across resource domains for data transport

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (1) US8750287B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2249525B1 (en)
JP (1) JP2012526433A (en)
KR (1) KR101333020B1 (en)
CN (1) CN102422602B (en)
WO (1) WO2010127893A1 (en)

Cited By (23)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US10116531B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2018-10-30 Cisco Technology, Inc Round trip time (RTT) measurement based upon sequence number
US10142353B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2018-11-27 Cisco Technology, Inc. System for monitoring and managing datacenters
US10250446B2 (en) 2017-03-27 2019-04-02 Cisco Technology, Inc. Distributed policy store
US10289438B2 (en) 2016-06-16 2019-05-14 Cisco Technology, Inc. Techniques for coordination of application components deployed on distributed virtual machines
US10374904B2 (en) 2015-05-15 2019-08-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Diagnostic network visualization
US10523512B2 (en) 2017-03-24 2019-12-31 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network agent for generating platform specific network policies
US10523541B2 (en) 2017-10-25 2019-12-31 Cisco Technology, Inc. Federated network and application data analytics platform
US10554501B2 (en) 2017-10-23 2020-02-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network migration assistant
US10574575B2 (en) 2018-01-25 2020-02-25 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network flow stitching using middle box flow stitching
US10594560B2 (en) 2017-03-27 2020-03-17 Cisco Technology, Inc. Intent driven network policy platform
US10594542B2 (en) 2017-10-27 2020-03-17 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method for network root cause analysis
US10680887B2 (en) 2017-07-21 2020-06-09 Cisco Technology, Inc. Remote device status audit and recovery
US10708183B2 (en) 2016-07-21 2020-07-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of providing segment routing as a service
US10708152B2 (en) 2017-03-23 2020-07-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. Predicting application and network performance
US10764141B2 (en) 2017-03-27 2020-09-01 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network agent for reporting to a network policy system
US10798015B2 (en) 2018-01-25 2020-10-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Discovery of middleboxes using traffic flow stitching
US10797970B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-10-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Interactive hierarchical network chord diagram for application dependency mapping
US10826803B2 (en) 2018-01-25 2020-11-03 Cisco Technology, Inc. Mechanism for facilitating efficient policy updates
US10873794B2 (en) 2017-03-28 2020-12-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. Flowlet resolution for application performance monitoring and management
US10972388B2 (en) 2016-11-22 2021-04-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Federated microburst detection
US10999149B2 (en) 2018-01-25 2021-05-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Automatic configuration discovery based on traffic flow data
US11128700B2 (en) 2018-01-26 2021-09-21 Cisco Technology, Inc. Load balancing configuration based on traffic flow telemetry
US11233821B2 (en) 2018-01-04 2022-01-25 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network intrusion counter-intelligence

Families Citing this family (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9729424B2 (en) * 2012-06-11 2017-08-08 Futurewei Technologies, Inc. Defining data flow paths in software-defined networks with application-layer traffic optimization
CN103533463A (en) * 2012-07-06 2014-01-22 中兴通讯股份有限公司 Method and device for establishing frequency slot channel
US9882713B1 (en) 2013-01-30 2018-01-30 vIPtela Inc. Method and system for key generation, distribution and management
US9826025B2 (en) * 2013-05-21 2017-11-21 Cisco Technology, Inc. Chaining service zones by way of route re-origination
US9509614B2 (en) 2013-06-20 2016-11-29 Cisco Technology, Inc. Hierarchical load balancing in a network environment
US9467478B1 (en) 2013-12-18 2016-10-11 vIPtela Inc. Overlay management protocol for secure routing based on an overlay network
US20160006614A1 (en) * 2014-07-03 2016-01-07 Futurewei Technologies, Inc. Source Routing Using Path Computation Elements
US10554537B2 (en) * 2014-07-24 2020-02-04 Telefonaktiebolaget Lm Ericsson (Publ) Segment routing in a multi-domain network
US10594580B2 (en) * 2015-08-03 2020-03-17 Avago Technologies International Sales Pte. Limited Network function virtualization management system
US9980303B2 (en) 2015-12-18 2018-05-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. Establishing a private network using multi-uplink capable network devices
AT522844B1 (en) * 2019-07-24 2021-05-15 Frequentis Ag Method for the transmission of data between a vehicle and a traffic safety system
US11444871B1 (en) 2021-07-26 2022-09-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. End-to-end path selection using dynamic software-defined cloud interconnect (SDCI) tunnels

Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1089517A2 (en) 1999-10-01 2001-04-04 Nortel Networks Limited Establishing connections accross a communications network
US20020156914A1 (en) * 2000-05-31 2002-10-24 Lo Waichi C. Controller for managing bandwidth in a communications network
EP1599000A1 (en) 2004-05-20 2005-11-23 Alcatel Provisioning of cross domain telecommunication services through dynamic label differentiation
US20080069010A1 (en) * 2005-05-24 2008-03-20 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method for processing the distributed path information request
US20080172732A1 (en) * 2004-01-20 2008-07-17 Defeng Li System For Ensuring Quality Of Service In A Virtual Private Network And Method Thereof
US7593340B2 (en) * 2006-06-02 2009-09-22 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method and system for multi-domain route computation
US7706344B2 (en) * 2006-02-28 2010-04-27 Nagoya Institute Of Technology Mobile terminal device, control method, and mobile communication system
US8374092B2 (en) * 2006-08-28 2013-02-12 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technique for protecting against failure of a network element using multi-topology repair routing (MTRR)

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP3617406B2 (en) * 2000-03-30 2005-02-02 日本電気株式会社 Quality assurance type communication service providing method and service providing method corresponding to multi-domain and service mediating apparatus
JP3844724B2 (en) * 2002-08-21 2006-11-15 日本電信電話株式会社 Wide area network system and wide area network communication method

Patent Citations (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1089517A2 (en) 1999-10-01 2001-04-04 Nortel Networks Limited Establishing connections accross a communications network
US20040215787A1 (en) * 1999-10-01 2004-10-28 Gibson Mark Robert Establishing connections across a communications network
US20020156914A1 (en) * 2000-05-31 2002-10-24 Lo Waichi C. Controller for managing bandwidth in a communications network
US20080172732A1 (en) * 2004-01-20 2008-07-17 Defeng Li System For Ensuring Quality Of Service In A Virtual Private Network And Method Thereof
EP1599000A1 (en) 2004-05-20 2005-11-23 Alcatel Provisioning of cross domain telecommunication services through dynamic label differentiation
US20080069010A1 (en) * 2005-05-24 2008-03-20 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method for processing the distributed path information request
US7706344B2 (en) * 2006-02-28 2010-04-27 Nagoya Institute Of Technology Mobile terminal device, control method, and mobile communication system
US7593340B2 (en) * 2006-06-02 2009-09-22 Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Method and system for multi-domain route computation
US8374092B2 (en) * 2006-08-28 2013-02-12 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technique for protecting against failure of a network element using multi-topology repair routing (MTRR)

Non-Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Douville, R et al; A Service Plane over the PCE Architecture for Automatic Multidomain Connection-Oriented Services; IEEE Communications Magazine; IEEE Service Center.
Pekhter, Y. et al; Carrying Label Information in BGP-4; IETF Standard, Internet Engineering Task Force, IETF, CH, May 1, 2001; XP015008888; ISSN: 0000-0003; p. 1-9.
Piscataway, US; vol. 46, No. 6, Jun. 1, 2008; pp. 94-102; XP011227791; ISSN: 0163-6804.
Rosen, E. et al; Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture; IETF Standard, Internet Engineering Task Force, IETF, CH, Jan. 1, 2001; XP015008814; ISSN: 0000-0003, p. 1-62.

Cited By (93)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US10374904B2 (en) 2015-05-15 2019-08-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Diagnostic network visualization
US10735283B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-08-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Unique ID generation for sensors
US11502922B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-11-15 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technologies for managing compromised sensors in virtualized environments
US10142353B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2018-11-27 Cisco Technology, Inc. System for monitoring and managing datacenters
US10171319B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-01-01 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technologies for annotating process and user information for network flows
US10177998B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-01-08 Cisco Technology, Inc. Augmenting flow data for improved network monitoring and management
US10181987B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-01-15 Cisco Technology, Inc. High availability of collectors of traffic reported by network sensors
US10230597B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-03-12 Cisco Technology, Inc. Optimizations for application dependency mapping
US10243817B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-03-26 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of assigning reputation scores to hosts
US11522775B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-12-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Application monitoring prioritization
US11516098B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-11-29 Cisco Technology, Inc. Round trip time (RTT) measurement based upon sequence number
US10305757B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-05-28 Cisco Technology, Inc. Determining a reputation of a network entity
US10320630B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-06-11 Cisco Technology, Inc. Hierarchichal sharding of flows from sensors to collectors
US10326673B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-06-18 Cisco Technology, Inc. Techniques for determining network topologies
US10326672B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-06-18 Cisco Technology, Inc. MDL-based clustering for application dependency mapping
US10116530B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2018-10-30 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technologies for determining sensor deployment characteristics
US10728119B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-07-28 Cisco Technology, Inc. Cluster discovery via multi-domain fusion for application dependency mapping
US10454793B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-10-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of detecting whether a source of a packet flow transmits packets which bypass an operating system stack
US10505828B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-12-10 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technologies for managing compromised sensors in virtualized environments
US10516586B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-12-24 Cisco Technology, Inc. Identifying bogon address spaces
US10516585B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-12-24 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method for network information mapping and displaying
US11496377B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-11-08 Cisco Technology, Inc. Anomaly detection through header field entropy
US11968103B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-04-23 Cisco Technology, Inc. Policy utilization analysis
US10536357B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-01-14 Cisco Technology, Inc. Late data detection in data center
US11968102B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-04-23 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of detecting packet loss in a distributed sensor-collector architecture
US10567247B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-02-18 Cisco Technology, Inc. Intra-datacenter attack detection
US11936663B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-03-19 Cisco Technology, Inc. System for monitoring and managing datacenters
US11477097B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-10-18 Cisco Technology, Inc. Hierarchichal sharding of flows from sensors to collectors
US11924072B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-03-05 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technologies for annotating process and user information for network flows
US10623284B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-04-14 Cisco Technology, Inc. Determining a reputation of a network entity
US10623282B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-04-14 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of detecting hidden processes by analyzing packet flows
US10623283B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-04-14 Cisco Technology, Inc. Anomaly detection through header field entropy
US10659324B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-05-19 Cisco Technology, Inc. Application monitoring prioritization
US11924073B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-03-05 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of assigning reputation scores to hosts
US10686804B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-06-16 Cisco Technology, Inc. System for monitoring and managing datacenters
US10693749B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-06-23 Cisco Technology, Inc. Synthetic data for determining health of a network security system
US11431592B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-08-30 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of detecting whether a source of a packet flow transmits packets which bypass an operating system stack
US10439904B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2019-10-08 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of determining malicious processes
US10129117B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2018-11-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. Conditional policies
US11405291B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-08-02 Cisco Technology, Inc. Generate a communication graph using an application dependency mapping (ADM) pipeline
US10742529B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-08-11 Cisco Technology, Inc. Hierarchichal sharding of flows from sensors to collectors
US11368378B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-06-21 Cisco Technology, Inc. Identifying bogon address spaces
US11902122B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-02-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. Application monitoring prioritization
US10797970B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-10-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Interactive hierarchical network chord diagram for application dependency mapping
US11902121B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-02-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of detecting whether a source of a packet flow transmits packets which bypass an operating system stack
US10862776B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2020-12-08 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of spoof detection
US10116531B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2018-10-30 Cisco Technology, Inc Round trip time (RTT) measurement based upon sequence number
US11902120B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-02-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. Synthetic data for determining health of a network security system
US10904116B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2021-01-26 Cisco Technology, Inc. Policy utilization analysis
US10917319B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2021-02-09 Cisco Technology, Inc. MDL-based clustering for dependency mapping
US11528283B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-12-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. System for monitoring and managing datacenters
US10979322B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2021-04-13 Cisco Technology, Inc. Techniques for determining network anomalies in data center networks
US11894996B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2024-02-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technologies for annotating process and user information for network flows
US11700190B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2023-07-11 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technologies for annotating process and user information for network flows
US11252060B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-02-15 Cisco Technology, Inc. Data center traffic analytics synchronization
US11102093B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2021-08-24 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of assigning reputation scores to hosts
US11121948B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2021-09-14 Cisco Technology, Inc. Auto update of sensor configuration
US11695659B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2023-07-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Unique ID generation for sensors
US11128552B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2021-09-21 Cisco Technology, Inc. Round trip time (RTT) measurement based upon sequence number
US11252058B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2022-02-15 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method for user optimized application dependency mapping
US11153184B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2021-10-19 Cisco Technology, Inc. Technologies for annotating process and user information for network flows
US11637762B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2023-04-25 Cisco Technology, Inc. MDL-based clustering for dependency mapping
US11601349B2 (en) 2015-06-05 2023-03-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of detecting hidden processes by analyzing packet flows
US10289438B2 (en) 2016-06-16 2019-05-14 Cisco Technology, Inc. Techniques for coordination of application components deployed on distributed virtual machines
US11283712B2 (en) 2016-07-21 2022-03-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of providing segment routing as a service
US10708183B2 (en) 2016-07-21 2020-07-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method of providing segment routing as a service
US10972388B2 (en) 2016-11-22 2021-04-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Federated microburst detection
US11088929B2 (en) 2017-03-23 2021-08-10 Cisco Technology, Inc. Predicting application and network performance
US10708152B2 (en) 2017-03-23 2020-07-07 Cisco Technology, Inc. Predicting application and network performance
US10523512B2 (en) 2017-03-24 2019-12-31 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network agent for generating platform specific network policies
US11252038B2 (en) 2017-03-24 2022-02-15 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network agent for generating platform specific network policies
US10764141B2 (en) 2017-03-27 2020-09-01 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network agent for reporting to a network policy system
US11146454B2 (en) 2017-03-27 2021-10-12 Cisco Technology, Inc. Intent driven network policy platform
US10594560B2 (en) 2017-03-27 2020-03-17 Cisco Technology, Inc. Intent driven network policy platform
US11509535B2 (en) 2017-03-27 2022-11-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network agent for reporting to a network policy system
US10250446B2 (en) 2017-03-27 2019-04-02 Cisco Technology, Inc. Distributed policy store
US10873794B2 (en) 2017-03-28 2020-12-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. Flowlet resolution for application performance monitoring and management
US11202132B2 (en) 2017-03-28 2021-12-14 Cisco Technology, Inc. Application performance monitoring and management platform with anomalous flowlet resolution
US11683618B2 (en) 2017-03-28 2023-06-20 Cisco Technology, Inc. Application performance monitoring and management platform with anomalous flowlet resolution
US11863921B2 (en) 2017-03-28 2024-01-02 Cisco Technology, Inc. Application performance monitoring and management platform with anomalous flowlet resolution
US10680887B2 (en) 2017-07-21 2020-06-09 Cisco Technology, Inc. Remote device status audit and recovery
US11044170B2 (en) 2017-10-23 2021-06-22 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network migration assistant
US10554501B2 (en) 2017-10-23 2020-02-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network migration assistant
US10523541B2 (en) 2017-10-25 2019-12-31 Cisco Technology, Inc. Federated network and application data analytics platform
US10904071B2 (en) 2017-10-27 2021-01-26 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method for network root cause analysis
US10594542B2 (en) 2017-10-27 2020-03-17 Cisco Technology, Inc. System and method for network root cause analysis
US11233821B2 (en) 2018-01-04 2022-01-25 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network intrusion counter-intelligence
US11750653B2 (en) 2018-01-04 2023-09-05 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network intrusion counter-intelligence
US10826803B2 (en) 2018-01-25 2020-11-03 Cisco Technology, Inc. Mechanism for facilitating efficient policy updates
US10798015B2 (en) 2018-01-25 2020-10-06 Cisco Technology, Inc. Discovery of middleboxes using traffic flow stitching
US10999149B2 (en) 2018-01-25 2021-05-04 Cisco Technology, Inc. Automatic configuration discovery based on traffic flow data
US10574575B2 (en) 2018-01-25 2020-02-25 Cisco Technology, Inc. Network flow stitching using middle box flow stitching
US11128700B2 (en) 2018-01-26 2021-09-21 Cisco Technology, Inc. Load balancing configuration based on traffic flow telemetry

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CN102422602B (en) 2016-05-11
JP2012526433A (en) 2012-10-25
EP2249525A1 (en) 2010-11-10
EP2249525B1 (en) 2012-10-31
KR20120005014A (en) 2012-01-13
US20120051221A1 (en) 2012-03-01
WO2010127893A1 (en) 2010-11-11
KR101333020B1 (en) 2013-12-19
CN102422602A (en) 2012-04-18

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8750287B2 (en) Traffic-engineered connection establishment across resource domains for data transport
CN104426766B (en) The end-to-end network path of dynamic across multiple network layers is established
CN107637031B (en) Path computation element central controller for network traffic
EP3429141B1 (en) Segment routing label switched path for non-segment routing enabled routers
CN102571557B (en) Dynamically generating application-layer traffic optimization protocol maps
CN101471853B (en) Route calculation method, unit and system
CN104685838B (en) Virtualized using abstract and interface the software defined network of particular topology is serviced
US9491086B2 (en) Distributed network planning systems and methods
EP2894820A1 (en) Dynamic end-to-end network path setup across multiple network layers with network service chaining
US9559944B2 (en) Method and related apparatus for establishing link-diverse traffic paths in a telecommunications network
CN103873366A (en) Aggregation network with centralized control
US20140376371A1 (en) Method and Device for Conveying Data Across at Least Two Domains
Kalmykov et al. Segment routing as a basis for software defined network
EP3123677A1 (en) A method to provide elasticity in transport network virtualisation
US11695688B2 (en) Computing segment identifier lists for multipaths in a segment routing-enabled network
CN105337870A (en) Route publishing method and device
CN114363249B (en) Bandwidth constraint for multi-path segment routing
US20140185607A1 (en) Communication system, communication path establishing method and management server
US11575572B2 (en) Network controller horizontal scaling for network device configuration sessions management
CN115865769A (en) Message processing method, network equipment and system
Eadala et al. A review on deployment architectures of path computation element using software defined networking paradigm
CN111988682B (en) Network control method, device and system
CN104348744A (en) Path computation method and path computation element
EP4075751A1 (en) Network controller horizontal scaling for network device configuration sessions management

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: ALCATEL LUCENT, FRANCE

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:BUI, DINH THAI;POUYLLAU, HELIA;REEL/FRAME:027229/0670

Effective date: 20111107

AS Assignment

Owner name: CREDIT SUISSE AG, NEW YORK

Free format text: SECURITY AGREEMENT;ASSIGNOR:LUCENT, ALCATEL;REEL/FRAME:029821/0001

Effective date: 20130130

Owner name: CREDIT SUISSE AG, NEW YORK

Free format text: SECURITY AGREEMENT;ASSIGNOR:ALCATEL LUCENT;REEL/FRAME:029821/0001

Effective date: 20130130

FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: PAYOR NUMBER ASSIGNED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: ASPN); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

STCF Information on status: patent grant

Free format text: PATENTED CASE

AS Assignment

Owner name: ALCATEL LUCENT, FRANCE

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:CREDIT SUISSE AG;REEL/FRAME:033868/0555

Effective date: 20140819

AS Assignment

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:NOKIA TECHNOLOGIES OY;NOKIA SOLUTIONS AND NETWORKS BV;ALCATEL LUCENT SAS;REEL/FRAME:043877/0001

Effective date: 20170912

Owner name: NOKIA USA INC., CALIFORNIA

Free format text: SECURITY INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS, LLC;PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC;REEL/FRAME:043879/0001

Effective date: 20170913

Owner name: CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKET SERVICES, LLC, ILLINOIS

Free format text: SECURITY INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS, LLC;PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP, LLC;REEL/FRAME:043967/0001

Effective date: 20170913

MAFP Maintenance fee payment

Free format text: PAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEE, 4TH YEAR, LARGE ENTITY (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: M1551)

Year of fee payment: 4

AS Assignment

Owner name: NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC., NEW JERSEY

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT AND ASSUMPTION AGREEMENT;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA USA INC.;REEL/FRAME:048370/0682

Effective date: 20181220

AS Assignment

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKETS SERVICES LLC;REEL/FRAME:058983/0104

Effective date: 20211101

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:CORTLAND CAPITAL MARKETS SERVICES LLC;REEL/FRAME:058983/0104

Effective date: 20211101

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC.;REEL/FRAME:058363/0723

Effective date: 20211129

Owner name: PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP HOLDINGS LLC, CONNECTICUT

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:NOKIA US HOLDINGS INC.;REEL/FRAME:058363/0723

Effective date: 20211129

AS Assignment

Owner name: RPX CORPORATION, CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:PROVENANCE ASSET GROUP LLC;REEL/FRAME:059352/0001

Effective date: 20211129

FEPP Fee payment procedure

Free format text: MAINTENANCE FEE REMINDER MAILED (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: REM.); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

LAPS Lapse for failure to pay maintenance fees

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED FOR FAILURE TO PAY MAINTENANCE FEES (ORIGINAL EVENT CODE: EXP.); ENTITY STATUS OF PATENT OWNER: LARGE ENTITY

STCH Information on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362

FP Lapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date: 20220610